Graham McNamee's father, John B. McNamee, was an attorney and legal advisor to President
Grover Cleveland's cabinet, and his mother, Anne, was a homemaker, who also sang in a church choir. Born in
Washington, D.C., and raised in
St. Paul, Minnesota, McNamee had early aspirations of being an
opera singer. He studied voice as a youth and sang in churches, and in 1922 gave a concert in Aeolian Hall, New York. In 1922, while serving jury duty in
New York City, he visited the studios of radio station
WEAF en route to the courthouse and, on a whim, went to audition as a singer. Someone noticed his voice and asked him to speak through a microphone. He was given an audition after which he was hired on the spot as a staff announcer. Along with fellow WEAF announcer
Phillips Carlin, whose voice was so similar very few listeners could tell them apart, McNamee quickly became famous. Over the course of the next decade McNamee worked for WEAF, and for the national
NBC network, when WEAF became its flagship station. ==Sportscasting==